Small ticket insurance point of view

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Big opportunities in small-ticket insurance


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Foreword

Opportunities abound, but a long-term perspective is critical What is in a name? Microinsurance … mass market insurance … insurance for emerging consumers … or as Accenture has coined, smallticket insurance. They all share common elements: large volumes, small premiums, basic benefit products delivered through alternative distribution channels. They also share another important characteristic: they represent an innovation that enables the insurance industry to expand its market, to bring new customers into the fold. The extension of insurance to new markets represents a tremendous opportunity, and a

tremendous responsibility. Formal insurance does not come naturally to persons who have never had it before. Consequently, it is absolutely critical that when we do get an insurance policy into their hands for the first time, even if it comes via SMS, they have a positive experience with the product and its benefits. That means that they need to know what is covered, for how long, how to claim if the insured event occurs and, most importantly, they need to have opportunities to witness the benefits that insurance brings. The objective is to create a culture of insurance within this new market so that customers have trust in the promise of the insurers and naturally see insurance as part of their risk management toolkit.

Accenture is prescient to identify the opportunities that are emerging as technologies unlock access to new markets for the insurance industry. But it is absolutely critical that insurers wading into these unchartered waters adopt a long-term perspective and realize that their goal is not to build market share, but to ensure that this new market has a positive experience with insurance.

By Craig Churchill Team Leader, ILO’s Microinsurance Innovation Facility Chair, Microinsurance Network

Bucking the trend Small-ticket insurance offers hope for beleaguered insurers In 2012, gross domestic product growth in Western Europe was non-existent. Life premiums shrank by 3.1 percent and the property & casualty sector was in the red to the tune of 0.2 percent1. Against this dismal backdrop small-ticket insurance premiums grew vigorously to between €9.5 and €11.5 billion (US$13 and $15.4 billion), and are projected to continue growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 6.2 percent through to 20172. In emerging markets, this line of business is expected to expand even more rapidly. In spite of this stunning success, Accenture believes small-ticket insurance is still failing to deliver on its full potential. To gain a better understanding of what is working, and what the key determinants of success are, we carried out an intensive secondary research study into the types of small-ticket insurance that are selling in Europe, and are being launched and piloted in Latin America and Africa.

We found that there are four important trends that are driving the supply of, and the demand for small-ticket insurance: rising disposable incomes among lowerto middle-class consumers in emerging economies, technological innovation, the growing importance of convergence and ecosystems, and improvements in operating systems.

Carriers that succeed at small-ticket insurance are likely to improve their overall performance. By demanding more frequent interactions and a deeper understanding of customers’ attitudes and actions, small-ticket insurance imposes a higher level of customer-centricity that helps increase insurers’ effectiveness across all their lines of business.

Our research also confirmed what we suspected: small-ticket insurance in mature markets (such as extended warranties and travel insurance) and microinsurance in emerging markets are very different in terms of product design, the sales process and the types of partner ecosystems that insurers require. However, the mechanisms for creating, distributing and administering these products are sufficiently similar to make a strong case for integration with each other, and to offer opportunities for reverse innovation.

We believe insurers need to deploy strategies and technologies that support small-ticket insurance in both mature and emerging markets. This will make it easier and less costly to achieve the success factors for both types: simple products and processes, the efficiency that enables affordability, and the ability to reach customers where, when and how it matters. Our conclusion: carriers have a lot to gain by investing in small-ticket insurance … but the rules are very different. 3


Global trends create a fertile landscape for small-ticket insurance After years of feeble and even negative growth, most insurers are eager to find a solution to their revenue woes. One of the opportunities that is attracting attention from carriers worldwide is small-ticket insurance. The supply of, and demand for simple, innovative products that are sold inexpensively have been supported by a number of trends. These are fanning interest in the segment despite its particular challenges and the flaccid state of the industry as a whole. The trends include:

The rise of the lower-middle class in emerging markets This is creating millions of new potential customers who have something to lose, and have the money to insure against its loss.

A plethora of new technologies These are giving rise to new insurance products, new channels for distributing traditional products, new ways of engaging with customers ‌ and a new breed of competitor. Mobile communication is a big game-changer. So is the growing role of mobile money (150 live services and 82 million customers ‌ and rising3), a key enabler of microinsurance for the unbanked and a convenient payment mechanism for firstworld customers.

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Convergence and ecosystems Many insurers are transforming their business and operating models to improve their effectiveness. One of the most radical strategies is the pursuit of synergy and innovation by partnering with other stakeholders in insurance or other sectors, and combining their respective assets and capabilities to form powerful ecosystems.

Improved operating models New insurance software is making it easier for carriers to achieve the levels of automation, scale and efficiency that are essential to making small-ticket insurance viable. In mature markets small-ticket insurance is a familiar concept – travel and sportsinjury insurance have been around for decades, while extended warranties have become commonplace. In emerging markets too it is no longer a novelty, although carriers have struggled to sell microinsurance profitably to customers who are unfamiliar with the concept, hard to reach, and have few if any relationships with financial institutions.

It is our conviction that smallticket insurance warrants serious consideration by any insurer that has the open-mindedness to find opportunity where others see only stagnation, the agility to adapt to the changing needs of the market, and the operational excellence to sell and service such products efficiently.


Definitions Small-ticket insurance includes all types of insurance where the premium and the insured amount are significantly smaller than is the case with conventional insurance. It extends across property & casualty, life & accident, and health insurance. In mature markets the most popular products are extended warranties on household items, laptops and mobile phones, and travel insurance. However there is a great diversity of risks which can be covered ranging from sports injuries, the cancellation of concert tickets, damage to or loss of spectacles and contact lenses, medical treatment of pets, wallet theft and many more. While these types of product generate most of their revenue in developed countries, their appeal is growing throughout the world, especially among younger, digitally-savvy, mobile-enabled consumers. Small-ticket insurance is also popular among the more affluent consumers in emerging markets – it is especially profitable in South Africa and throughout Latin America. However, the potential here is far greater for what is generally referred to as microinsurance. Target customers are those at the base of the economic pyramid (BOP) who

earn between US$2 and $8 a day and are engaged in some form of economic activity. The types of insurance are similar to conventional coverage in mature markets, but the premiums may be as low as 50 US cents a month. Microinsurance is also characterized by innovation in the areas of product design, distribution, payment and claims management, and by partnerships with various stakeholders. Both help overcome the challenges of reaching and servicing target customers who are invariably under financial pressure, often unfamiliar with the concept of insurance, and frequently located in remote areas that are poorly serviced by communications infrastructure.

– from cattle to motorcycles – are gaining in popularity, while term life, personal accident and health insurance are inherently important to low-income customers, as they are to the more affluent.

To learn what others are saying about small-ticket insurance, see Further Reading on page 23.

Microinsurance began with credit life – a policy compulsorily linked to a loan that gives the lender the assurance that he will be repaid – and is still the most prevalent form of small-ticket insurance in most emerging markets. Funeral policies are common, given the high cost of burials in societies where communities are close. As it progresses along the maturity curve, microinsurance includes additional areas of protection. Crop insurance and policies that cover the means of production

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Worlds apart, yet a lot in common Small-ticket insurance embraces a wide and rapidly expanding diversity of products. Yet they all address risks which consumers recognize and – if approached at the right time with a reasonable offer – are willing to insure against. In most cases the frequency and/or severity of the insured events are relatively low. This enables insurers to offer coverage at prices that are perceived to be affordable.

Figure 1. Development of small-ticket insurance by region and product (illustrative) Europe Germany

France

UK

Italy

Latin America Spain Poland Turkey

Brazil

Mexico Colombia Peru

Africa South Africa Nigeria Kenya Angola

Small-ticket Insurance in Mature Markets Extended warranty Travel insurance Winter sports insurance Short-term car insurance Event ticket insurance Spectacle & lens insurance

Microinsurance in Emerging Markets Life Life and accident Accident Health Property Developed (in terms of volumes and/or providers) Source: Accenture Research

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Nascent (in terms of volumes and/or providers)

Information unknown, product not relevant or very futuristic for the market

Gray space (potential opportunity)


In mature markets this usually allows them to build in a higher profit margin than is the case with conventional insurance products. In emerging markets, where insurers often have to invest in costly education programs and new channels and mechanisms for engaging customers, the return on investment may take longer to materialize. Perhaps the biggest difference between small-ticket insurance in mature and emerging markets is that in the former, carriers are selling a fairly conventional product that provides coverage for risks not included in customers’ mainstream insurance policies. They are offering it to consumers who are familiar with the concept, are easy to reach, and can comfortably afford to buy. Microinsurance, on the other hand, is likely to be the primary coverage of those customers who buy it. These are consumers who often have no experience of insurance, who are hard to reach, and for whom the investment in premiums is very significant.

Affluent, sophisticated consumers have demonstrated their strong affinity for small-ticket insurance. The simplicity, relevance, and ease of purchase via the mobile and online channels they prefer are consistent with everything they have always said to Accenture’s researchers about their changing attitudes and behavior regarding insurance4. This goes a long way to explaining its rapid growth and profitability. The opportunity in emerging markets is different, but perhaps even greater. The oft-reported expansion of the middle classes in Asia, Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe has drawn many millions of consumers into the US$2 - $8 a day income band which qualifies them as prospects for microinsurance. An earlier report by Accenture5 quotes a World Bank estimate that 2.3 billion consumers fit this profile.

at the airport about to board an aircraft, at the scuba resort planning her series of dives, or at the agricultural co-operative purchasing her seed for the next season. The agility to offer customers relevant products, combined with a strong crossselling capability and a sophisticated operating model that ensures efficiency and scalability, are key attributes of the successful small-ticket insurer.

So while the types of product and the method of engaging with customers in the two markets may be radically different, the mechanisms for creating, distributing and administering small-ticket insurance have a great deal in common.

Improvements in analytics are helping insurers to identify prime prospects for small-ticket insurance. At the same time, advances in distribution are enabling them to offer such products at exactly the moment when the prospect is most concerned about the risk – when she is

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Mature markets: products tailor-made for the modern consumer Small-ticket insurance is a concept that has already proved itself in mature markets. Accenture’s research in Europe2 shows that it currently generates annual premiums of between €9.5 and €11.5 billion (US$13 and $15.4 billion), mostly through the sale of extended warranties and travel insurance. It is expected to grow at a rate of 6.2 percent a year through to 2017, creating a market worth €12.6 billion (US$17.1 billion) in four years’ time. The small-ticket insurance market is complex and volatile – it is highly fragmented, has a long tail, and is evolving at a rapid pace. As a result our research tended to focus on the more popular, established products. One consequence of this conservative approach is that our growth projections are more likely to be under- than overstated. In a business where innovation is such a strong driver of growth, new concepts such as telematics and usagebased insurance will have an impact that is difficult to estimate – other than to predict it will be massive and will reach into areas of opportunity which insurers to date have not even contemplated. While many of the large insurance groups offer small-ticket products, they have generally been tentative in their approach to the segment, particularly when they rely mostly on agent networks. Their range of products has evolved slowly since travel insurance was introduced well over a century ago. In many cases the products are second-class citizens within the carrier’s overall portfolio – they are limited to specific countries and applications, they are poorly integrated with the mainstream business and operating models, and they are relegated to brokers, third-party administrators or other organizations (such as credit-card companies) to market and sell. This lack of support impedes their scalability and profitability, which in turn limits their sales potential.

All of this may change as customers vote with their feet. Not only have consumers expressed a strong desire for more relevant insurance products; they have also shown themselves to be receptive to being approached through digital channels. Insurers that can identify prospects, and then offer them suitable products at the right time, in the right context, and via a convenient channel, are likely to experience strong growth across a wide spectrum of coverages. The benefits will not be limited to smallticket insurance. Among the factors that make it difficult for insurers to

build loyalty, and to cross-sell, are the infrequency of their engagements and a relatively poor knowledge of what customers think and do when it comes to insurance. Carriers that succeed with small-ticket insurance have good, up-todate information about their customers, predictive modeling that helps determine the ‘next-best action’, and the ability to continually measure and refine their sales efforts. The consequent improvements in customer-centricity, loyalty and sales effectiveness can provide a boost to their performance across all their lines of business.

Figure 2. Small-ticket insurance in Europe: market size and potential growth (selected products only) 6.2% CAGR

$17.1bn 380

$13.5bn 250

500 380 1,640

380 250 1,380

5,410

4,400

8,800 6,790

2013 ($m)

Forecast Size 2017 ($m)

Spectacles & Lenses

Travel

Winter Sports

Short-term Car

Event Ticket

Extended Warranty

Source: Accenture Research

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Emerging markets: meeting the needs of the emerging middle class Small-ticket insurance in emerging markets has also been around for some time, and here too its potential is significantly untapped – although for different reasons. The affordability and inaccessibility of the target customers have only recently been alleviated by, respectively, the economic expansion of many developing economies and the penetration of new channels such as cellular telephony. Added to these, the determination of a number of global insurers to make inroads into emerging markets has resulted in innovative new products, business models and partnerships that have provided valuable insights into how microinsurance can be made to work. In the first of the two regions that were the focus of Accenture’s microinsurance survey, Latin America, consumers at the base of the economic pyramid in the four most important markets – Brazil, Mexico, Colombia and Peru – have an aggregated spending power of $319 billion a year. In the second region, Africa, BOP consumers

in Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa have an aggregated income of $160 billion a year5. With much of the attention of analysts and global insurers being focused on Asia, the huge growth potential of Latin America and Africa is often overlooked. It is estimated that some 5 percent of the consumers worldwide who fit the profile for microinsurance – 135 million of them – have already bought some form of coverage6. This leaves a potential global market of 3 to 4 billion policies worth $30 to $40 billion in annual premium revenue7. This potential is unfolding very rapidly. Most observers were surprised at the speed of adoption of mobile phones in developing countries, but the logic is sound – the lack of infrastructure made the value proposition more persuasive than in developed countries. The same is happening with mobile money, and other

innovations will certainly follow suit. All will help create a marketplace conducive to microinsurance. Governments, their agencies and nongovernmental organizations in most of the countries offer a range of incentives to encourage local and global insurers alike to extend their services to less affluent citizens. At the same time, organizations that have the trust, the extensive networks or the technology to reach large numbers of low-income consumers are leveraging their assets to partner with carriers that lack this access. These factors will go a long way to helping insurers develop efficient, scalable business models that unlock the potential of microinsurance.

Figure 3. Small-ticket insurance in emerging markets: market size and potential growth (US$bn) Latin America

Africa

+7x +7x

+3x

+3.5x

10.1

8.9

4.5

4.7

2.8 1.5 0.7 0.2 0.3 0.1 0.1 Size 2013

1.3 0.7

1.2 0.6 0.4 0.3 0.3

Forecast Size 2017

1.5

Potential Market 2013

Mexico

* Base of the Economic Pyramid Source: Accenture Research

10

0.8

0.5 0.3 0.7 0.1

1.7

Size 2013

1.9

2.3

3.1

BoP* Customers Brazil

13% CAGR

2.0

1.1

0.4 0.2

0.7 0.4 1.9

Forecast Potential Size 2017 Market 2013

Affluent Customers Colombia

Peru

Other LatAM

2.1

1.9

4.1

11% CAGR 17% CAGR

4.9

1.6 0.7 0.4

0.2

Size 2013

1.0 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.4 0.6

11% CAGR 1.1

2.0 1.3 0.7 1.7

0.7

0.6

0.3 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1

1.4

Forecast Potential Size 2020 Market 2013

BoP* Customers

Size 2013

1.4

Forecast Size 2020

0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 Potential Market 2013

Affluent Customers

South Africa

Nigeria

Angola

Other Africa

Kenya

Ghana


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Similar products for disparate markets The customer who buys ski injury insurance in Europe and his counterpart in Africa who covers the risk of her maize crop failing could hardly be more different. Their locations, their lifestyles and the challenges they face are literally worlds apart. It would be understandable to think of small-ticket insurance for affluent customers, and microinsurance, as completely different products. But this would be wrong.

Figure 4. The similarities and differences of small-ticket insurance in mature and emerging markets

Marketing

Distribution & Channel Management

Product Design & Pricing

Small-ticket Insurance in Mature Markets •  Partnerships / co-branding & / or white-labelling with distributors

•  Point-of-sale integration with distributors

•  Geographic positioning marketing

•  Increasingly direct mobile

•  Customer segments mostly young,

often urbans

distribution •  Location-sensitive mobile

offering push

•  Simple streamlined products •  Pre-underwritten, few exclusions •  Limited or no options •  Easy-to-understand value proposition •  Pricing based on very few criteria

Microinsurance in Emerging Markets •  Partnerships / co-branding with cellphone operators, retailers •  Close relationships with governments, NGOs & associations •  Social value & social content key to success •  Great majority of customers in lowincome segment

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•  Direct & indirect sales

•  Simple, streamlined products

•  Extensive sales force & customer education

•  Pre-underwritten, few exclusions

•  Tangible benefits for end-customers (e.g. discounts, lottery etc.) •  Distribution through airtime dealers & mobile-money agents

•  Limited or no options •  Easy-to-understand value proposition •  Pricing based on very few criteria & often limited risk-management steering


As figure 4 shows, the two types of product differ markedly in terms of their target customers and how they are sold, as well as in product design, distribution channels, and the nature of the ecosystems which insurers need to create in order to operate effectively. But they also have a great deal in common. In both cases, the products need to be simple. Affluent customers do not want to spend a lot of time weighing up the features of a product that costs $10, while poor and often illiterate customers lack the familiarity with insurance to grapple with a complicated product. While the customers may be different, the need to understand them, and the risks they represent, is vital in all cases. A solid data collection, analytics and predictive modeling capability is essential to add precision to operations in mature and emerging markets alike.

Sales & New Business

Technology plays a similar role in both. Mobile phones not only provide access to customers, but can make it possible to see where they are and enable them to pay for their new insurance policy. The potential of small-ticket insurance in mature and developing markets alike will to a large degree be fulfilled by innovative technology that overcomes the challenges inherent in the respective business models. Processing is straightforward and efficient, to keep costs down, facilitate distribution, enable quick claims settlement, and support scalability. It is also flexible, to accommodate different payment mechanisms and claims triggers – from a conventional first notice of loss to flood waters reaching a pre-defined level.

Policy & Contract Management

Partnerships are key. Insurers in unfamiliar foreign markets would struggle to successfully launch new microinsurance products on their own, but in mature markets they also depend heavily on partners for co-branding or white-labeling their small-ticket products. Given the many similarities between small-ticket insurance sold to customers in different parts of the world, there are significant opportunities for crossfertilization throughout the value chain. There is also a strong case to be made for insurers to increase the integration of their products. By utilizing a single operating platform, and adopting reverse innovation to capitalize on the successful components of one product to benefit others in other parts of the world, they can achieve levels of efficiency and scale that would otherwise elude them – and that may be indispensable to achieving viability.

Claims Management

•  Streamlined, mobile-enabled processing

•  Very limited to no policy modification & administration

•  Mobile- & digitally-enabled claims submission & status monitoring

•  Smartphone- or tablet-supported sales processes

•  Processes can be handled via mobile devices

•  Claims payment through bank account

•  Payment through bank account or m-wallet

•  100% straight-through processing

•  Streamlined, mobile-enabled processing

•  Very limited to no policy modification & administration

•  Mobile-enabled claims submission & status monitoring

•  Smartphone-supported sales for agents

•  Processes can be handled via mobile devices

•  Text – sms-based enrollment for end customers

•  100% straight-through processing

•  Claims payment via airtime / mobile-money accounts or over the counter

•  Premium payment through m-wallet, airtime, pre-paid credits, correspondent banking etc.

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Essential ingredients for success The potential of small-ticket insurance is undeniable. In mature markets it offers significantly larger profit margins than more traditional products, while in emerging markets the sheer scale of the opportunity is irresistible. But in neither case will it simply fall into the laps of insurers. To succeed, they will have to be persistent, innovative and smart. It goes without saying they will need to understand their customers and the risks they are dealing with. This is likely to be easier in the more developed countries, where insurers have more information about customers, their interests and their behavior. The challenge is greater when it comes to microinsurance. Most customers are first-time buyers of insurance, so data about them is limited, especially when the venture is entirely commercial and unsupported by government or charitable agencies. What is more, global carriers entering emerging markets have no experience of the sub-economic consumer sector and may need to collaborate closely with local partners that have existing distribution networks and customer bases, a sound knowledge of the target customer, and more experience of the types of risk that will be covered. Innovation and agility are two other factors that will differentiate the winners. Innovation will be necessary to develop products, distribution mechanisms, operating models and marketing campaigns that work in these unusual circumstances. And agility will be critical, partly because the first iterations are unlikely to be perfect and will need to be rapidly and continually modified, and also because both groups of customers are constantly evolving in terms of their needs, preferences and actions. Analytics and big data will be indispensable in planning and implementing new products, marketing campaigns and sales drives.

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Just as these capabilities will have a broader application than small-ticket insurance alone, the successes that mobile communications and mobile money are enjoying in developing markets will help insurers develop more effective operating models for all markets and products. A key contributor to agility is operational simplicity, which also enhances efficiency. A low cost ratio is always important, even in the high-margin affluent market – distribution partners often demand big commissions for the sales they facilitate. However in emerging markets, where large volumes are essential to achieving breakeven, operational efficiency is nonnegotiable. The insurers that are likely to thrive in these markets are those that have thoroughly integrated operations. Their small-ticket offerings will benefit from sharing the same operating platform, marketing campaigns and sales and service channels as their other products – at the very least, their small-ticket operations in their mature and emerging markets should be integrated.

And finally, since most smallticket insurance will have to be sold to people who aren’t thinking of buying it at that time, the ability to sell will be crucial – it will help enormously if the products are easy to explain, easy to buy, easy to pay for and easy to claim on.


Common success factors for small-ticket insurance in mature and emerging markets Figure 5. Full Mobile Enablement

• Mobile enablement across the value chain • Mobile money / payment as an increasingly significant enabler • Geo-localization will also apply to both approaches

Simplicity & Nimbleness

1

2

3

• Simple & intuitive product & process features to support customer education & address time constraints • Applies to processing, settlement & servicing, risk management

Seamless Integration • Integrated operations & management across the value chain • Seamless connection with partners, third-party administrators & the wider supporting ecosystem

Low-cost Operations • Low-cost processing & settlement for sustainable profitability • Cost-efficient technology solutions

Economies of Scale • Reduced unit costs through increased volumes • Successful volume management across value chains, product lines & geographic markets

Advanced Analytics

• Collection, analysis & utilization of data on customers, process & performance • Improved sales effectiveness & productivity throughout the value chain – for small-ticket insurance as well as other business lines

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A road map to small-ticket maturity At Accenture, it has been our experience that the capabilities of small-ticket insurers can be plotted along a maturity path. At the one end of the scale, carriers are generally characterized by low levels of integration, scale and efficiency, which together inhibit their potential to move along the spectrum. There is, however, a clear road map for succeeding at small-ticket insurance. Level 1: The single-niche provider

Level 3: The integrated, industrialized provider

Carriers in this category generally focus on either small-ticket insurance in mature markets or microinsurance in emerging markets. They offer a narrow range of products in a single geographic market. They rely for their sales on a limited, partnership-based franchise with few touch points, and for their service on multiple third-party administrators. They are inadequately integrated with both, which has a detrimental impact on their quality and service. Their profitability is constrained, as is their ability to achieve the scale and efficiency they need to move to the next level.

At the highest level of maturity, insurers are able to market, sell and service an extensive range of small-ticket insurance products across emerging as well as mature markets, and within multiple regions and countries. They make extensive, systematic use of data analytics to ensure that product design happens quickly and in line with customers’ needs, and that underwriting, marketing, sales support and claims management – including fraud detection – gain the full benefit of all available data. Their claims function is also distinguished by an allocation capability that ensures notification, assessment and settlement are handled appropriately according to the complexity of the claim. Their distribution is based on an integrated multi-channel and multi-device franchise that delivers a greater number of touch points and

Level 2: The multi-niche provider These insurers tend to have a broader selection of small-ticket insurance products but still restrict their operations to a single country or a fairly limited region. They use an extended but focused network of franchises and other physical and digital partners to sell these products, retaining a stake in the benefits of enhancing the operational efficiency of their intermediaries. While they run their operations off multiple platforms, they have a streamlined organization and bestpractice processes that achieve synergy and relatively high levels of effectiveness.

supports cross- and up-selling. They run their operations off an integrated, flexible, cloud-enabled platform. This, and their utilization of managed services and outsourcing, allows them to scale effortlessly and without having to make large investments in capacity. They are well equipped to integrate acquired businesses seamlessly. Their operational agility and efficiency ensure their profitability, irrespective of how the market may evolve. As insurers progress along this road map they will experience the benefits of managing their small-ticket products and operations in an integrated fashion rather than separately. They will not only be able to capitalize on their experiences and innovations in one market to enhance their effectiveness in others. Crucially, they will also achieve the essential economies of scale much more rapidly.

Figure 6. The road map from niche to integrated small-ticket insurance provider Growth potential & level of scale Integrated, Industrialized Provider

Multi-niche Provider

Single-niche Provider

Level of integration & efficiency

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Allianz among the small-ticket leaders Allianz is one of the global carriers that has been the most aggressive in its exploration of the potential of small-ticket insurance. In mature markets its retail product range extends from pet insurance in Germany, to event-ticket and bank-account cover in Switzerland, and wedding insurance sold through Towergate Insurance in the United Kingdom. Travel insurance is a staple line. While Allianz utilizes a variety of channels to distribute these products, in its home market of Germany none of these appears to be dedicated exclusively to its small-ticket lines.

Allianz is also among the carriers that has made the greatest progress in emerging markets. It launched its microinsurance offering in 2004, starting in India with credit life cover and partnering with the sustainable development organization GIZ (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit) and Care International, among others. In 2007 it expanded into Africa and Latin America. In 2012 it had 17 million customers on its books and generated €80 million (US$105 million) in revenue. This was a banner year for the company’s microinsurance offering, as the

launch of its extended group insurance business had helped to more than triple the number of customers and boost revenue by 37 percent compared to 2011. While India is its largest market by far, contributing half of all microinsurance revenue, premiums are growing faster in Africa (79 percent up in 2012) and Latin America (49 percent) than in Asia (34 percent). Allianz’s geographic focus for its range of microinsurance products – which include term life, endowment life, credit life, personal accident and motorcycle cover – are India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Colombia and Western Africa.

BRADESCO SEGUROS PREPARES FOR MICROINSURANCE ON A LARGE SCALE Bradesco Seguros, the insurance subsidiary of Banco Bradesco, is a multiline insurance corporation with a wide range of insurance solutions including auto, property, casualty, engineering, cargo, marine, health, life and pensions. It has more than 37 million customers across Brazil from a variety of economic groups. The carrier first offered microinsurance products aligned to the needs of the low-income market, such as Bradesco First Protection, in January 2010 – which sold approximately 1.3 million policies during its first year. In September 2010 Bradesco Seguros adapted one of its household products to the house construction features of Favela Santa Marta, in Rio de Janeiro, to offer the community suitable and affordable protection against

that allowed insurers to register new clients remotely, and made it possible for special microinsurance brokers to be certified much more quickly than traditional brokers. In 2013 Bradesco launched the country’s first official microinsurance product under the new legislation. A combination of personal accident, funeral and In 2012 Bradesco Seguros launched household insurance protection, it a personal-accident product targeted the low-income clients to be sold, using point-of-sale of Bradesco Bank and was sold technology, through a banking through its branches in lowcorrespondent network known as income communities. Bradesco Expresso. The banking correspondent is a distribution Supported by the new legislation, Bradesco Seguros has developed channel based in the targeted an effective distribution model that community and including retailers combines brokers and technology. such as hairdressers, bakeries, It is currently in the process of pharmacies and similar stores. broadening its product range In June of that year the Brazilian and enlarging its sales force, as it government passed new prepares to operate microinsurance microinsurance-specific legislation on a large scale. fire, lightning, explosions and other similar risks. This product was developed as part of the CNSeg-Microinsurance Innovation Facility project called Estou Seguro (CNSeg is the Brazilian Insurers Confederation, and “estou seguro” means both “I am sure” and “I am insured”).

Source: Learning Journey and Microinsurance Network Interview by Bradesco Seguros head of microinsurance 17


A tremendous opportunity for those who do it right There is every indication that small-ticket insurance will grow rapidly over the next few years into a very big opportunity. In mature markets, advanced analytics and digital distribution are the triggers that will catapult it from the sizeable, profitable segment which it is at present, to a major contributor to the insurer’s revenue. And in developing markets, the sheer scale of the emerging customer base is simply too large to be ignored. Many insurers are already in the market, but most are failing to optimize their operations – which consequently are under-performing. Few carriers have integrated their small-ticket lines with their other lines of business, and even fewer are managing their mature-market and emerging-market products as similar offerings within a single multi-market portfolio. Where they have implemented technology solutions to improve their processes, these seldom address the entire value chain. Few carriers are taking full advantage of the power of analytics and predictive modeling. It is hardly surprising that economies of scale and other efficiencies continue to elude them. By recognizing the commonalities between the two types of small-ticket insurance, and deploying strategies and technology solutions that support both, insurers will find it considerably easier and less costly to achieve the key success factors for both markets: simplicity, affordability and accessibility.

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And those that do get the better of these challenges will find themselves strongly positioned to capitalize on a very significant opportunity for growth.


Janalakshmi Financial Services teams with Accenture to expand services for India’s poor Accenture and Janalakshmi Financial Services (JFS), one of India’s leading microfinance organizations, have signed a five-year agreement in which Accenture will provide business process outsourcing (BPO) and IT services to help JFS rapidly scale up its operations to deliver microloans to India’s poor. Under the agreement, Accenture will manage JFS’s customer and account master data and provide processing, reconciliation and reporting services as part of its customer onboarding and processing operations. It will also manage JFS’s application platform including its core banking system, customer relationship management software, and employee portal and website.

“The opportunity for serving the unbanked population in India is large and our recent equity raise positions us well to take advantage of this opportunity,” said Ramesh Ramanathan, chairman of JFS. “Our opportunity for growth rests on an unwavering focus to serve the financially underserved Indian population with leading technology and sound processes. With Accenture delivering core IT and business processes, we will be more agile, more scalable, and far better positioned to serve our clients across India.”

with JFS to help identify new technology opportunities, and provide infrastructure outsourcing services – including end-user device management and network and server management. With an integrated approach comprising business process outsourcing and technology, Accenture can deliver higher value services to help JFS drive operational excellence, and enable its management team to keep the focus on its customers and on increasing financial inclusion in India.

Accenture will also provide application maintenance services to support third-party technologies, work proactively

Accenture to provide I.T. and advisory services to LeapFrog’s insurance investees in Kenya and Ghana LeapFrog Investments supports financial services businesses — mostly companies that provide insurance — in Africa and Asia where there is the greatest potential for both financial returns and social impact. LeapFrog recognizes the importance of operational excellence and technology to drive growth, sustainability and customer service quality. Simple product design and operational efficiency are key attributes of its investees’ strategies to profitably reach emerging consumers with affordable products. Accenture, via its not-for-profit development group Accenture Development Partnerships, is

providing information technology (IT) project management and advisory services to two of LeapFrog Investments’ insurance investees in Kenya and Ghana. These services support operational and human capability building that will allow the insurance companies to scale their microinsurance businesses to low-income customers nationally. This includes training of operational and IT personnel in IT management good practices, developing a tailored plan and toolkit for technology rollout, supporting technology implementation and vendor management, and communicating internally and externally. 19


How can Accenture help? By combining our various services, capabilities and applications, Accenture is uniquely positioned to help carriers in all of the key dimensions which are essential to success in small-ticket insurance: • Defining growth and distribution strategies specific to small-ticket insurance. • Integrating small-ticket offerings into the carrier’s overall customer-centric strategies. • Defining and shaping a small-ticket operating model across geographies and lines of business. • Developing partnership strategies with other players within small-ticket and microinsurance ecosystems: telecommunication providers, banks, specialized brokers, other retail organizations, non-government organizations (NGOs) and others. • Designing, launching and scaling microinsurance innovations through Accenture Development Partnerships’ work with local and international NGOs and other important actors operating in developing countries that are critical partners to commercial insurers. • Providing our Quick Selling Insurance Platform, a cloud-enabled platform that supports short product launch cycles, multi-channel and multi-device distribution models, and all backoffice functions from quoting through to claims settlement and third party relationships.

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• Providing managed services based on the Quick Selling Insurance Platform to support the small-ticket line of business throughout the value chain. The foundation is the Accenture Duck Creek suite, which is reinforced with Accenture’s mobility, cloud and business process outsourcing services. The Accenture Multi-Access Enterprise Architecture provides easy connection between the back office and any front end. In addition to these we can draw on more than 30 years’ experience working with many leading insurers, including 34 of the world’s top 40 carriers.

To find out more about Accenture’s small-ticket insurance services, software and capabilities please visit www.accenture.com/ insurance, or contact one of the authors of this white paper or any of the specialists listed on page 23.


Accenture’s Quick Selling Insurance Platform This platform is underpinned by Accenture’s widely recognized management consulting expertise, our market-leading systems integration and delivery capabilities, and our awardwinning insurance software platform: the Accenture Duck Creek suite. It enables access via a number of different points, including a Web application, a tablet application, a smartphone application, a Web service and the Accenture Duck Creek front end. Product development and configuration are effected by means of the Accenture Duck Creek Product Studio. The platform makes it possible to launch a new standard product in three to five weeks, from the receipt of the product specifications through build and configure, integration test, to application distribution.

The platform’s claims service helpdesk will handle first notice of loss and related requests, receiving calls from customers as well as agents. The operators will submit the claim to the insurer’s claims operations. The Quick Selling Insurance Platform is smoothly integrated with the insurer’s operations. The first level of customer and agent support will usually be provided by the insurer, whose support desk will have the backup, where needed, of the platform helpdesk. The online integration with the insurer’s processes is complemented by daily activity reports relating to quote and policy volumes. Among other details, these will include policy information, customer data, premium details, commission breakdowns and tax data.

In addition to accelerating speed to market, the Quick Selling Insurance Platform offers the carrier all the advantages of becoming a digital insurer, including convenient multichannel access for customers, improved processes and technology resulting in lower costs, and better collection and utilization of data. It is a plugand-play solution that requires no upfront investment and employs variable pricing. By reducing complexity and minimizing the impact on the insurer’s operations, our platform supports innovation, increases efficiency and drives growth.

Figure 7. Accenture’s Quick Selling Insurance Platform Insurer and agents

Access points Front End: Accenture Duck Creek

Direct

Web Accenture Duck Creek Tablet Accenture Multi-Access Enterprise Architecture

Retailers

Smartphone

Web service

Insurer Core Platform

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Accenture’s small-ticket insurance team Alex Borrell is a Managing Director in our Spanish insurance practice. alex.borell@accenture.com

Further reading

References

1. Insurance in Emerging Markets: Drivers and Profitability, Swiss Re Sigma, 2011

1. World Insurance in 2012: Progressing on the Long and Winding Road to Recovery, Swiss Re sigma, 2013

2. Protecting the Poor: A Microinsurance Compendium Vol II, ILO-Munich Re, 2012

Alexander Holst is a Managing Director, specializing in operating model definition and based in our German insurance practice. alexander.holst@accenture.com

3. The Landscape of Microinsurance in Africa 2012 – Full Study, the MicroInsurance Centre, 2013

Massimiliano Livi is a Managing Director in our Italian insurance practice. massimiliano.livi@accenture.com

4. The Landscape of Microinsurance in Latin America and the Caribbean: A Briefing Note, the MicroInsurance Centre, 2012

Simon Martin is a Senior Manager within Accenture Development Partnerships, specializing in microinsurance and other innovations in financial inclusion in developing countries. simon.martin@accenture.com

5. Mobile Money for the Unbanked: Emerging Practices in Mobile Microinsurance, GSMA, 2012

Claire McCormack is a Managing Director in our UK insurance practice. claire.e.mccormack@accenture.com

7. Country Diagnostics and Other Releases, Access to Insurance Initiative, ongoing

Riaan Singh is a Senior Manager in our South African insurance practice, specializing in insurance operating models. riaan.singh@accenture.com

6. Microinsurance Papers, Microinsurance Innovation Facility, ongoing

8. The Landscape of Microinsurance in Asia and Oceania, Munich Re Foundation, due 12 Nov 2013

2. Accenture Research into SmallTicket Insurance, 2013 3. Mobile Money for the Unbanked: State of the Industry – Results from the 2012 Global Mobile Money Adoption Survey, GSMA, 2012 4. Customer-centricity: the Key to Differentiation and Growth in the Insurance Industry, Accenture, 2011 5. Succeeding at Microinsurance Through Differentiation, Innovation and Partnership, Accenture, 2012 6. Insurance in Developing Countries: Exploring Opportunities in Microinsurance, Lloyd’s Microinsurance Centre, 2009 7. Microinsurance Has Potential to Become $50 Billion Market, IFC, June 2011

Erico Yamamoto is a Senior Manager in our Brazilian practice, specializing in insurance operating models. erico.t.yamamoto@accenture.com

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Authors

About Accenture

Thomas D. Meyer is the Managing Director of Accenture’s Insurance Industry in Europe, Africa and Latin America (EALA) and the Country Managing Director of Accenture Switzerland. His consulting activities mainly focus on conceiving, planning and implementing new business models and business process change, and supporting them through information technology and innovative partnerships built to last. thomas.d.meyer@accenture.com

Accenture is a global management consulting, technology services and outsourcing company, with approximately 275,000 people serving clients in more than 120 countries. Combining unparalleled experience, comprehensive capabilities across all industries and business functions, and extensive research on the world’s most successful companies, Accenture collaborates with clients to help them become high-performance businesses and governments. The company generated net revenues of US$28.6 billion for the fiscal year ended Aug. 31, 2013. Its home page is www.accenture.com.

Jean-Francois Gasc is Managing Director of Accenture Management Consulting for Insurance across Europe and Latin America. He is leading work at major insurance groups in France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, in the areas of life consolidation and transformation, health insurance consolidation and replatforming, merger and post-merger integration, P&C industrialization, Solvency II, and CRM and multi-channel management. jean-francois.e.gasc@accenture.com Madhu Vazirani is a Senior Manager in Accenture Research. She has 17 years of experience in investment and business research, and project management, including the past seven years at Accenture, where she leads the Asia Pacific research team for financial services. She regularly conducts strategic analysis on the banking and capital markets industries worldwide, and consults to both for-profit and not-forprofit organizations on financial inclusion in emerging markets. madhu.vazirani@accenture.com

About Accenture Development Partnerships Accenture Development Partnerships collaborates with organizations working in the international development sector to help deliver innovative solutions that truly change the way people work and live. Its award-winning business model enables Accenture’s core capabilities – its best people and strategic business, technology and project management expertise – to be made available to clients in the international development sector on a notfor-profit basis.

About the ILO’s Microinsurance Innovation Facility The International Labour Organization’s (ILO) Microinsurance Innovation Facility is currently funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Z Zurich Foundation to support the development of better insurance services for more low-income people. The Facility has provided more than 60 innovation grants to insurance companies, brokers and associations, NGOs and cooperatives to test new approaches to product design, distribution and consumer education. By learning from these action research partners, the Facility is a critical knowledge hub, extracting lessons from pioneers, and sharing their successes and challenges with all interested parties (see www.ilo.org/microinsurance).

About the Microinsurance Network The Microinsurance Network, with more than 200 members from around the world, is a multi-stakeholder platform that promotes the development and delivery of effective insurance services for low-income people by encouraging shared learning and advocacy (see www.microinsurancenetwork.org).

About Accenture Research Accenture Research is Accenture’s global business research team with over 180 professional researchers across 22 countries. The team has experts in industry, technology, financial, survey and economic research.

Copyright © 2013 Accenture All rights reserved. Accenture, its logo, and High Performance Delivered are trademarks of Accenture.

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